| William Wirt - Funeral sermons - 1826 - 690 pages
...give the most active exercise to the original faculties of the mind. So that it is perfectly true, that if you wished so to teach as to make the mind...which seem to me common to all teaching, and which are in their nature calculated to produce the results to which I have referred. 2. I would recommend... | |
| American Institute of Instruction - Education - 1831 - 416 pages
...give the most active exercise to the original faculties of the mind. So that it is perfectly true, that if you wished so to teach as to make the mind...which seem to me common to all teaching, and which are in their nature calculated to produce the results to Avhich I have referred. 1. Let a pupil understand... | |
| Francis Wayland - Sermons, American - 1833 - 388 pages
...active exercise to the original faculties of the mind. So that it is perfectly true, that if you wish so to teach as to make the mind the fittest possible...occasion, committed to other hands. You will, however, 1 trust, allow me to suggest here, one or two principles which seem to me common to all teaching, and... | |
| Education - 1836 - 432 pages
...give the most active exercise to the original faculties of the mind. So that it is perfectly true, that if you wished so to teach as to make the mind...which seem to me common to all teaching, and which are in their nature calculated to produce the results to which I have referred. 1. Let a pupil understand... | |
| Schoolmaster - 1836 - 926 pages
...give the most active exercise to the original faculties of the mind. So that it is perfectly true, that if you wished so to teach as to make the mind...teaching is, on this occasion, committed to other hands. Yon will, however, I trust, allow me to suggest here one or two principles which seem to me common... | |
| Michigan. Legislature. Senate - Michigan - 1837 - 740 pages
...science of education, while it communicates in a given time the greatest amount of knowledge, to render mind the fittest instrument for discovering, applying and obeying the laws of the universe in which man is placed. The high purposes of education are thus beautifully expressed... | |
| Michigan. Legislature. House of Representatives - Michigan - 1837 - 640 pages
...of education, while it communicates in a given time the greatest amount of knowledge, to render the mind the fittest instrument for discovering, applying and obeying the laws of the universe in which man is placed. The high purposes of education are thus beautifully expressed... | |
| Henry Barnard - Education - 1863 - 902 pages
...to give the most active exercise to the original faculties of the mind. So that it h perfectly true, that if you wished so to teach as to make the mind...which seem to me common to all teaching, and which are in their nature calculated to produce the results to which I have referred. 1. Let a pupil understand... | |
| Henry Barnard - Education - 1863 - 904 pages
...teach as to give to a pupil, in a given time, the greatest amount of knowledge, you would so leach as to render his mind the fittest instrument for discovering...which seem to me common to all teaching, and which are in their nature calculated to produce the results to which I have referred. 1. Let a pupil understand... | |
| Henry Barnard - Education - 1863 - 898 pages
...teach as to give to a pupil, in a given time, the greatest amount of knowledge, you would so leach as to render his mind the fittest instrument for discovering...which seem to me common to all teaching, and which are in their nature calculated to produce the results to which I have referred. 1. Let a pupil understand... | |
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